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Personal Voices: An Unnatural Disaster

By Emma Dixon, AlterNet. Posted November 19, 2005.


Persistent institutional racism not only made recovery from Hurricane Katrina more difficult, it created the conditions that allowed the horrors to happen.
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When Hurricane Katrina tore up the roof of my house, it didn't care that I'm black. My white neighbors, like my black neighbors, saw trees fall on their homes and saw their refrigerators rot and mold. They, like I, lived without electricity or phone for over a week after that color-blind natural disaster.

But an unnatural disaster hit us as well, the institutionalized racism that began centuries ago. The flooded areas of New Orleans were three-quarters black, while in dry areas, African Americans were a minority. Over the years, many well-off white people have left the city for gated suburban communities. The remaining whites tend to live on higher ground.

The unnatural disaster of racism swept away the savings accounts and credit cards with which poor black people could have bought their escape. A century of Jim Crow laws barred black families in the South from certain schools and jobs. Social Security benefits were not available at first to domestic and agricultural workers, the occupations of most African Americans at that time. Due to discrimination, most black WWII veterans were unable to use the GI Bill, which gave most white veterans the homeownership and college educations that have made their children and grandchildren so prosperous.

The unnatural disaster of racism swept away the cars with which poor black people could have escaped Katrina. Almost a third of residents of the flooded neighborhoods did not own the cars on which the evacuation plan relied. If the promise to the freed slaves of 40 acres and a mule had been kept, then six generations later, their descendents would own more assets, and the mule would now be a Buick.

Nor has this unnatural disaster abated today, as I learned from my own experience. Almost immediately after Katrina hit my town, I saw spray-painted signs warning that looters would be shot and killed. I was warned by a white neighbor not to move around too much lest I be mistaken as a looter.

When my daughter came to get me from my damaged house and drove me to her home in Indiana, we were turned away by a white motel clerk in Illinois on the pretext that there were no vacancies. A later phone call confirmed what their sign said, that rooms were available. I also experienced first-hand racial discrimination in gas lines, and in food and water distribution lines by a police officer.

The world noticed that the evacuees stuck in the SuperDome and those turned back at gunpoint at the Gretna bridge were mostly black. But who noticed that the first no-bid federal contracts went to white businessmen, cronies of white politicians?

It's hard for me to believe, but this persistent racism is invisible to many white people. A Time Magazine poll taken in September found that while three quarters of blacks believe race and income level played a role in the government response to Hurricane Katrina, only 29 percent of whites felt the same.

The color of money is green, but the color of poverty has a darker hue. Families in the flooded black neighborhoods of New Orleans had a 2004 median income of only $25,759 a year, barely more than half the national average. Why? Louisiana is a low-wage, anti-union state. Many workers have pay so low that they receive public housing and food stamps. New Orleans voters made history by approving a citywide living wage in 2002, but a court blocked it, allowing poverty wages to continue.

Last week I drove home to Louisiana. In my neighborhood I hear the constant buzzing of chain saws removing uprooted trees, and the sounds of hammering as roofers repair endless numbers of damaged roofs. The fragrances of Pine Sol and bleach tinge the air as residents attempt to save refrigerators and rain-soaked carpets. I thank God that my family and I survived the storm, and that the recovery has begun.

Yet I ask myself when the other recovery will begin.

Katrina revealed the racial wealth divide in New Orleans and the unnatural disaster that caused it. When will we rebuild our society so that everyone, regardless of race, has the means to escape the next disaster?

Digg!

Emma Dixon, of Mandeville, Louisiana, is a financial literacy educator with United for a Fair Economy.

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You Have To Look Beyond Skin To Understand The Truth
Posted by: qrswave on Nov 19, 2005 4:15 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There is no doubt that darker skinned Americans suffer disproportionately from poverty and lack of education in America.

But, this results from historical economic inequities that were not only never compensated as they should have been, but more importantly have been systematically exploited by our monetary system until this day.

We are easily divided by the color of our skins, which makes it an easy vice to target; racism is almost universally deplored.

But, classism is not. The rich get richer and the poor get poorer. Isn't that the way it's always been? Isn't that the way it's supposed to be?

NO; absolutely not; not if you have a just monetary system.

A just monetary system does NOT give exclusive control of the money supply to a few entities and allow them to exploit everyone else's need for money by charging them INTEREST on its use.

That is economic discrimination at its worst.

We must end this discrimination in order to save our children.

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lizzieg
Posted by: lizzieg on Nov 19, 2005 6:38 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Last night my son and I watched the Matthew McConaughey's speech at the end of "A Time to Kill" - we had switched channels briefly from Pistons basketball - both of us had seen the movie before. As the lawyer decried the treatment of a young black girl by Klansmen, I cried yet again with the shame, the yearning, and the righteous anger I feel every time I witness/watch the huge gulf between us exposed in all its ugliness and complicated depth.

What I will NEVER accept is how any white person breathing can witness the brilliance of African American talents, prowess and amazing capacity for survival and STILL hold fast to the hate, condescension and myopia that is so present in white behavior and beliefs. What proof do we need? How do we translate what our children see into any sensible framework? It is what it is - wrong, wrong, wrong.

I also get nervous when I hear people shift the argument from race to class. Of course economics weaves through the Katrina dilemmas, but it is racism that has allowed the plunge to classism follow its sickening spiral. It is just too easy to cast race aside and make it the secondary issue. It is racism that informs the behavior and practices of banks, lenders, many bosses, and businesses. It is racism that allowed commentators to make claims like, "Katrina has ripped the lid off the cauldron of racism in New Orleans..." Like black people did not already know what was going on? And if the ripped-off lid surprised white people, they have been blind, have ignored the literature, the press, the movies and the constant examples of the racism we can ALL see if we choose to.

I have raised my children to be color conscious but to put that consciousness in perspective: "Boys, I reserve the right not to like someone, but it will NEVER be based on how they look. No one got to vote at their conception what color, sex, appearance or condition they would be born to." They tell me now, as young men, that no other opinion I have offered has mattered more in their ability to naviagate our world - it has given them the freedom to accept everyone as they are with the caveat of making their own judgments based on other peoples' behavior. The proof lies in their characters. They play ball, play games, date, develop friendships, share our house, our table with anyone they choose. That is the legacy I want to leave them. It is my imperative.

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» RE: lizzieg Posted by: qrswave
It's not just color
Posted by: jeffrey7 on Nov 19, 2005 8:43 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
To be sure down in the South there is strong racism directed towards people of color. Folks are'nt that upfront in the North but it's still there. Oh no my friends the 'new' racism
goes even deeper.does'nt matter the color,it's the money.
You can own property,but it's got to be the 'right' kind of property.You can have money,but,that too has to be the right money.What appears to be institutionalized racism is in fact institutionalized classism. Project funds,reconstruction monies,anything that involves the use of money,the old banking axiom 'Lend money to the people that don't need a loan.' is doubly applied in these times. Let's be clear on this.
The people that want New Orleans and the surrounding areas rebuilt,want it done with as many poor people missing from the equation as possible. It's always been that way. The wealthy have always oppressed the poor. All of the other crap
about race,religion,skin color,origin of birth are just 'add-ons'
to a stagnate thoughtform that says "I'm better than you."
Wake up Sunshine!! You are no better that anyone. Just because your greed has allowed you to reach the mostly unattainable 'More',does'nt make you a person of charactor,
of honest,trustworthy and honorable. I will guarentee you there were plenty of 'walking' refugees that were 'passed over' by SUV's holding two riders.
With the same speed that the power to wage war was handed over to an ex-cokehead,we could have made
'Tax Free National Recovery Bonds'. 30yr. $1,000 bonds that would sell for $10. They would have the money for a 'Total' rebuilding and then some because the bonds would be priced so that EVERYONE could be involved. But their money has blinded them to the easiest way to generate funding. That's what happens when the wealthy and their friends and family run the Government.

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Leadership?
Posted by: Sojourner on Nov 19, 2005 9:02 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The greatest success of the Civil Rights movement was that it did its organizing from the bottom up. That's also the success of the labor movement. Grassroots, or as we called it in the 70s, participatory, democracy is the only kind of democracy that matters.

Noblesse oblige helps, but it will never get the job done. The fact that Americans still envy royalty (fictional characters are almost always at least well-to-do; 50cent is gonna 'get rich or die') shows how fundamentally ignorant we are.

What we really need is each other. We don't know how to do that. Our political leadership and our economic leadership expect to be treated royally. Even our religions tell us that our judge is a heavenly king.

I had hoped to see some changes in my lifetime that would acknowledge that elitism works only in the arts. In ethics, politics, and economics elitism grinds us down. So how do we find a successful leadership that refuses the perks of success? Oh yeah, that's what we mean by saintliness.

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» You're right Posted by: qrswave
» ummmmmmm... Posted by: daniel1982
» Think out of the box, daniel Posted by: qrswave
» crusty Posted by: qrswave
invisibility
Posted by: ladyoracle on Nov 19, 2005 11:20 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I am skeptical as to how "invisible" the invisible racism of today is supposed to be.

It seems obvious to me.

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» RE: invisibility Posted by: flapjax_at_midnite
Why I think another Kathrina will happen
Posted by: Rich3800 on Nov 20, 2005 7:13 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I think another Kathrina and worse, will happen because of the ingrained culture of savior-victim. Not that the authorities make calamities happen, they fail to take the precautions to prevent them from getting worse. Besides, It makes for great photo ops for a president ;-) Like the dam that broke that could have been reinforced before the Hurricane. The cavalry comes in to save the day... but too late. There would not be heroes without victims and harm is often self-inflicted through lack of foresight.

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Evacuation Plan and Race
Posted by: billfaster on Nov 20, 2005 9:06 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
First, let me start off by saying that my comments are in no way meant to be a personal attack against the victims of hurricane Katrina. That being said, however, I am compelled to point out that the City of New Orleans' evacuation plan called for the use of public transportation vehicles (such as school busses) to remove those citizens who did not have access to private sources.

I'm sorry, but I'm sick and tired of the race card continually being used as a diversion from the truth. The simple truth of the matter is that Mayor Ray Nagin failed miserably to execute the evacuation plan in place. Where is the outrage and disgust over the Mayor's inability to carry out the proper plan of action? The city's plan called for the designation of certain facilities as shelters of last resorts - meaning shelters for those who could not get out on their own. The plan further outlined the fact that those citizens seeking shelter at these locales were required to bring with them three days worth of food and water. Now I'm not going to pretend that I was privy to Mayor Nagin's every comment to his citizens, but the question remains, did he advise the city's residents of this fact? Did he utilize the city's resources as outlined? Why were there so many school busses under water? Where was his leadership?

It seems everyone has a finger to point, but no one has stepped up to challenge Mayor Nagin's role in all of this. Why do you think that is...Is it because our country has become so politically correct that we allow the facts to be trumped by this very premise? I can assure you of one thing - If the Mayor of New Orleans had been white, we would still be hearing about it...

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» RE: vacuation Plan and Race Posted by: astockton
» RE: vacuation Plan and Race Posted by: billfaster
» RE: vacuation Plan and Race Posted by: astockton
» tragic... Posted by: qrswave
» RE: vacuation Plan and Race Posted by: billfaster